The appellant trades in aerated drinks, mineral water and fruit pulp based drink known as “slice”. It sought to deposit sales tax at 8% under residual entry on the basis that “slice” is not a preserved food article thus not covered by entry 47 of Schedule I of the Act. The department on the other hand treated it as food article and levied tax @12% under entry 47 of Schedule I of the Act. The appellant filed appeal up to Tribunal without any success. The appellant thereafter filed appeal before The Delhi High Court against the decision of the Tribunal rejecting the appeal filed by it.
HELD
There is no reference under the Delhi Sales Tax Act imposing definition contained in The Prevention of Food Adulteration Act and reliance by the Tribunal on it was misplaced. The predominant content of the Mango Pulp Drink is water i.e. 70 % and the Mango Pulp content is 17%. This product does not claimed to be a fruit juice and therefore the revenue cannot urge that it has even a minimum modicum of nutritive properties. Arguably, if the product was entirely milk based, the consideration might have been different. However, the mango pulp based drink, at best an instant energy giver and in all cases a thirst quencher; by no stretch of imagination can it be called a “food article” at least not within the contemplation of the statute, by an application of the common parlance test. Accordingly, the High Court allowed the appeal filed by the company and held that the impugned product is not covered by entry 47 of Schedule I of the Act as “preserved food article” and taxable at 8% under residual entry.